Mark Norwood Indicted in Second Austin Murder

Mark Norwood, the Bastrop dishwasher who was arrested one year ago for the 1986 murder of Christine Morton, was indicted by a Travis County grand jury on Friday for the January 1988 murder of Debra Masters Baker in Austin.

“It has been excruciating for all of us who loved Debra to wait for this day. Now, we finally have a face to put with her tragic murder,” Baker’s family said in a statement released by attorney Sam Bassett.

Norwood's attorney, Russell Hunt Jr., said his client maintains his innocence in both cases. Hunt said Norwood's mother had been subpoenaed to testify before a Travis County grand jury on Friday morning.

"There's only one reason why" that would happen, he said. "That's if they intend to indict him."

Norwood, 58, was charged on Nov. 9, 2011 with the Morton murder and a trial in that case is set to begin in January. Christine Morton's husband, Michael Morton, spent nearly 25 years wrongfully imprisoned for that crime before DNA found on a blue bandana about 100 yards away from the crime scene linked Norwood to the murder.

Researchers for Michael Morton's lawyers — John Raley of the Houston law firm Raley & Bowick and Nina Morrison and Barry Scheck of the New York-based Innocence Project — looked for similar unsolved crimes in places where Norwood had lived over the years and found the Baker case on the Austin Police Department’s website.

Norwood lived only blocks from the Bakers' home in the 1980s. Morton’s lawyers alerted Travis County officials, who quickly matched the DNA sample from the bandana in the Morton case to a pubic hair found at the scene of Baker’s murder.

After the DNA revelation last year, Michael Morton was freed from prison and exonerated. Meanwhile, Baker's family — particularly her sister Lisa Masters Conn, her children Jesse and Caitlin Baker and her husband Phillip Baker — has been anxiously awaiting progress in the investigation of her murder.

Both Christine Morton and Debra Baker were beaten to death in their beds in the early morning hours by an intruder. Both murders occurred on the 13th day of the month. While Williamson County investigators immediately seized on Michael Morton as the prime suspect in his wife's murder, in Baker's case there were no viable suspects, and the case remained cold for more than two decades.

“Though we have been frustrated at the length of time it has taken to get to this point, we are grateful to the Austin Police Department and Travis County District Attorney’s office for their hard work on Debra’s case,” the family said. “We are extremely grateful for the work of John Raley and the Innocence Project.”

In investigating Morton’s wrongful conviction, his lawyers allege they found evidence that the prosecutor who oversaw the case, former district attorney Ken Anderson, withheld key evidence. Anderson, who is now a state district judge, is facing both a civil lawsuit and an unusual court of inquiry that could result in criminal charges for his role in Morton’s wrongful conviction. The court of inquiry is scheduled to begin Dec. 10 in Williamson County.

Anderson vociferously denies allegations of wrongdoing, though he has apologized for the system’s failure in the Morton case. In response to the State Bar of Texas civil lawsuit alleging that he violated professional ethics rules, Anderson has also said that the statute of limitations on the alleged infractions has expired.

Baker’s family has intently watched the proceedings against Anderson in the Morton case. Had the prosecutor and investigators in that case pursued evidence that was withheld, they contend, the murder of their sister, mother and wife, could have been prevented.

Morton’s lawyers say that the Williamson County district attorney’s office withheld a transcript in which his mother-in-law told a sheriff’s investigator that the couple’s 3-year-old son saw a “monster” who brutally attacked his mother. He said his father was not home.

The defense lawyers also say prosecutors withheld information that Christine Morton’s credit card was used after her death and that neighbors saw a man park his green van and walk into the woods near the Morton’s home.

“It is difficult for us to process the reality that Debra might still be with us if evidence in the Morton case had been handled in the manner required by law,” the family said.

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Michael Morton s name isnt on the ballot, and he isnt endorsing anyone in what has become a nasty campaign to become the next district attorney in tough-on-crime Williamson County. But his wrongful conviction is the central issue in the GOP primary fight between incumbent District Attorney John Bradley who spent five years opposing DNA testing that ultimately exonerated Morton and County Attorney Jana Duty. While Morton may be staying out of the fray, many close to his case have decided to get involved, hoping, they say, to change the way justice is meted out in Williamson County by urging voters to hold Bradley accountable.

Former Williamson County resident Michael Morton was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of his wife. Then 25 years later, he was freed after DNA evidence showed he was not guilty. Yesterday marked the one-year anniversary of Morton’s release. He spoke at the Texas Capitol about his experiences over the past 26 years, and the difficulties the Williamson County justice system presented in obtaining the evidence that eventually exonerated him. Morton told the audience: The odd thing about it is that The Innocence Project was willing to say “Look. Texas statute allows this. We will pay for all the expenses. Just let us have it and we’ll do it." And for reasons that haven’t been elaborated on or maybe articulated, to mine or anyone else’s satisfaction that I’m aware of, is that they fought this. And fought this. And fought this.